Hauroth

[1] The German blazon reads: Durch einen schräglinken silbernen Wellenbalken von Rot und Grün geteilt.

Oben ein durchbrochenes rundbogiges, durch drei gestaffelte, nasenbesetzte Spitzbögen unterteiltes goldenes Fenster.

The municipality’s arms might in English heraldic language be described thus: A bend sinister wavy argent between gules a window with three staggered lancet arches joined by a semicircular arch Or, and vert three ears of wheat of the third.

The charge below this, the three ears of wheat, refers to the village’s founding in the 11th century as an agricultural estate (whose name meant “Huso’s Clearing”).

The other charge, a Gothic church window modelled on one in the cloister at Ravengiersburg Monastery refers to a document from this monastery, which says that the Provost of Ravengiersburg transferred, among other things, holdings in Hauroth to Saint Stephen’s Foundation in Mainz in 1103.

Kalenborn Eppenberg Laubach Leienkaul Müllenbach Hauroth Urmersbach Masburg Düngenheim Kaisersesch Landkern Illerich Eulgem Hambuch Gamlen Zettingen Kaifenheim Brachtendorf Ulmen Alflen Auderath Filz Wollmerath Schmitt Büchel (municipality) Wagenhausen Gillenbeuren Gevenich Weiler Lutzerath Bad Bertrich Urschmitt Kliding Beuren Moselkern Müden Treis-Karden Lütz Lieg Roes Möntenich Forst (Eifel) Dünfus Brohl Binningen Wirfus Brieden Kail Pommern Briedel Altlay Peterswald-Löffelscheid Haserich Sosberg Forst (Hunsrück) Altstrimmig Reidenhausen Mittelstrimmig Blankenrath Panzweiler Walhausen Schauren Tellig Hesweiler Liesenich Moritzheim Grenderich Zell Neef Bullay Sankt Aldegund Alf Pünderich Greimersburg Klotten Faid Dohr Bremm Bruttig-Fankel Senheim Nehren Ediger-Eller Mesenich Valwig Ernst Beilstein Ellenz-Poltersdorf Briedern Cochem Vulkaneifel Bernkastel-Wittlich Mayen-Koblenz Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis
Coat of arms
Coat of arms